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Molecular and Cellular Biology, March 2006, p. 2202-2214, Vol. 26, No. 6
0270-7306/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/MCB.26.6.2202-2214.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Eppley Institute for Research in Cancer and Allied Diseases, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska 68198-7696,1 Department of Pathology and Immunology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 631102
Received 13 July 2005/ Returned for modification 16 August 2005/ Accepted 3 January 2006
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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In primary murine fibroblasts, mutationally activated Ras (RasV12) leads to an irreversible growth arrest characterized by up-regulation of the tumor suppressor proteins p53 and p19ARF and the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p16INK4a (50, 59). Primary cells arrested by activated Ras are phenotypically indistinguishable from those arrested by continuous culture (9, 27, 59). These cells have an enlarged, flattened morphology, stop proliferating at subconfluent cell densities, and express several markers of replicative senescence (59). In RasV12-expressing cells, inactivation of the p19ARF/p53 pathway, either genetically or by introduction of viral oncogenes that inactivate p53-mediated growth arrest, bypasses cellular senescence and leads to transformation (22, 34, 39, 50, 58, 59). While deletion of p16INK4a does not bypass RasV12-induced senescence in murine cells, disruption of p16INK4a in human cells allows for a bypass of RasV12-induced senescence (4, 6, 28, 29, 70). This could be due to both differences in regulation of the INK4a/ARF locus between mouse and human cells and the relative importance of different INK4 family members in mouse cells.
RasV12 induces expression of both p16INK4a and p19ARF in primary mouse fibroblasts (50, 59), but RasV12 cannot induce p14ARF expression in human fibroblasts (21, 69). Differences in regulation of the INK4a/ARF locus in human and mouse cells are not completely understood. p15INK4b, a related INK4 family member, is also regulated by RasV12 in mouse fibroblasts. p15INK4b is up-regulated by RasV12, and deletion of p15INK4b abrogated RasV12-induced senescence in primary mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs) (40, 43). These data indicate that members of the INK4 family of proteins are important regulators of RasV12-induced senescence in both mouse and human fibroblasts.
Expression of constitutively activated Raf, constitutively activated MEK, or Ras effector loop mutants that activate Raf has shown that both the senescence-promoting (20, 41, 76) and oncogenic (12, 24, 44, 54, 68, 71) properties of RasV12 can be replicated by activation of the Raf/MEK/ERK cascade. Expression of constitutively activated Raf or MEK in primary mouse or human fibroblasts causes cell cycle arrest, induction of p53 and p16INK4a, and expression of senescence-associated (SA) ß-galactosidase activity (20, 41, 76). Growth arrest induced by the Raf/MEK/ERK cascade relies primarily upon p53 signaling. The ability of constitutively activated Raf to cause growth arrest is dependent upon its ability to induce expression of p21CIP1 (60, 72). Furthermore, Raf/MEK/ERK signaling stabilizes p53 expression and can regulate whether p53 activation produces senescence or apoptosis (20).
Kinase Suppressor of Ras 1 (KSR1) is a molecular scaffold for the Raf/MEK/ERK cascade (37, 46, 49). KSR1 expression regulates the intensity and duration of growth factor-induced ERK activation to modulate a cell's proliferative, oncogenic, and adipogenic potential (36, 37, 55). Importantly, immortalized KSR1/ MEFs are resistant to oncogenic transformation by RasV12, which can be rescued by ectopic expression of KSR1 (37). Deletion of KSR1 blocks RasV12-induced ERK activation but not activation of other Ras effector pathways, indicating that KSR1-scaffolded ERK activation is necessary for RasV12-induced transformation (37).
Given the necessity of KSR1 expression in RasV12-induced transformation in immortalized MEFs, we assessed whether KSR1 was necessary for RasV12-induced senescence in primary MEFs. RasV12-induced senescence and replicative senescence are phenotypically similar and require many of the same pathways. Therefore, we also assessed whether KSR1 could play a role in cellular immortalization. We show that KSR1 is necessary for RasV12-induced senescence and that its deletion accelerates 3T9-mediated immortalization of primary MEFs. KSR1/ MEFs were resistant to RasV12-induced senescence and instead showed increased proliferation. Furthermore, RasV12 failed to induce p53, p19ARF, p16INK4a, and p15INK4b expression in primary KSR1/ MEFs. Reintroduction of wild-type KSR1, but not a mutated KSR1 construct unable to bind activated ERK, restored RasV12-induced senescence. On continuous culture, deletion of KSR1 accelerated spontaneous immortalization and increased the number of primary cultures escaping replicative crisis. Coupled to the observation that immortalized KSR1/ MEFs are resistant to RasV12-induced transformation (37, 42), these data demonstrate that KSR1-scaffolded ERK activity is necessary for RasV12-induced and replicative senescence and for transformation.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Construction and production of recombinant retroviruses. KSR1-FLAG, KSR1.C809Y-FLAG, and KSR1.FSFP/AAAP-FLAG were subcloned from the EcoRI and SalI sites of pCMV5 (33) into the EcoRI and XhoI sites of MSCV-IRES-GFP. MSCV-IRES-GFP, MSCV-KSR1-IRES-GFP, MSCV-KSR1.C809Y-IRES-GFP, MSCV-KSR1.FSFP/AAAP-IRES-GFP, pBabePuroRasV12, pBabePuroMEKEE, or pBabePuro retroviral vectors were cotransfected with an ecotropic packaging vector into 293T cells. At 48 to 72 h posttransfection, viral supernatants were collected and filtered. Viral supernatants were then either stored at 80°C or used immediately to infect cells. Puromycin-resistant cells were selected with 4 µg/ml puromycin (Sigma).
Generation of cell lines. Nonimmortalized MEFs were generated from day 13.5 KSR1/ and KSR1+/+ embryos as previously described (49). To assess cellular immortalization, cells were maintained in culture under a 3T9 protocol (67) until immortalized populations of cells emerged. To assess immortalization of MEFs after plating at low density, 2 x 104 passage 9 KSR1/, KSR1+/, or KSR1+/+ MEFs were seeded in a 60-mm dish and fed for 4 weeks until immortalized colonies emerged. To produce KSR1/ MEFs expressing ectopic KSR1 constructs, KSR1/ MEFs were infected with MSCV-KSR1-IRES-GFP, MSCV-KSR1.C809Y-IRES-GFP, MSCV-KSR1.FSFP/AAAP-IRES-GFP, or MCSV-IRES-GFP control vector. Fluorescence was detected by flow cytometry, and cells were separated for low-positive levels of fluorescence. Cells were excited at 488 nm and separated at 530/20 nm, with the baseline fluorescence of uninfected cells having a mean intensity of 6 (range, 0 to 15), and KSR1-expressing cells having a mean intensity of 63 (range, 21 to 101). Postsorted cells were assessed for purity by fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) analysis. Collected pools of cells were grown in culture and assessed for KSR1 expression level by Western blotting.
Proliferation studies. To assess cellular senescence, cells were seeded at 1 x 104 cells per well in 24-well plates or 5 x 104 cells per 35-mm dish. Triplicate dishes were counted 3 h after seeding to account for plating discrepancies and were then assessed every 48 to 72 h for total cell number on a Beckman Coulter Counter or by trypan blue exclusion. To assess low-density growth during immortalization, cells were seeded at 2 x 104 cells per 35-mm dish. Triplicate dishes from three independent KSR1/ and KSR1+/+ cultures were counted 3 h after seeding to account for plating discrepancies and were then assessed every 24 h (passages 5, 10, and 15) or every 72 h (passage 18) for total cell number on a Beckman Coulter Counter.
SA ß-galactosidase activity. SA ß-galactosidase activity was measured as previously described (16). Briefly, cells were washed twice with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and fixed for 5 min in 2% formaldehyde-0.2% glutaraldehyde, washed twice with PBS, and stained with SA ß-galactosidase staining solution (1 mg/ml X-gal [5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl ß-D-galactosidase] [stock of 20 mg/ml in dimethylformamide], 40 mM citric acid-sodium phosphate [pH 6.0], 5 mM potassium ferrocyanide, 5 mM potassium ferricyanide, 150 mM NaCl, and 2 mM MgCl2). Cells were incubated overnight at 37°C in the absence of CO2. Cells were visualized the following day and quantified (minimum of 50 cells per trial) for the presence or absence of staining.
Radiation response. Passage 4 KSR1/ or KSR1+/+ MEFs (1 x 106) were plated in complete media 24 h prior to analysis. Cells were irradiated with 8 Gy and then incubated at 37°C for the indicated times prior to lysis and Western blot analysis.
Transformation assays. MEFs stably expressing RasV12 and KSR1 or control vectors were seeded in 0.32% Nobel agar at 1 x 104 cells per 35-mm dish to assess anchorage-independent growth or seeded at 1 x 105 cells per 10-cm dish to assess loss of contact inhibition. Colonies were counted, photomicrographs were taken, and dishes were stained with Wright-Giemsa 14 to 28 days after seeding.
In situ ERK activation assay. Cells were seeded at 1.5 x 104 cells/well in a 96-well plate 24 h prior to analysis and subjected to an in situ plate assay using a Li-Cor Odyssey infrared imaging system to quantify ERK activation. Cells at 70% confluence were deprived of serum for 4 h and treated with 25 ng/ml platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium-1% bovine serum albumin for 5 min. Anti-phospho-ERK1/2 (Cell Signaling) (1:100) and anti-ERK1 (Santa Cruz, 1:100) primary antibodies and anti-mouse Alexa Fluor 680-conjugated (Molecular Probes) (1:100) and anti-rabbit IRDye800conjugated (Rockland) (1:100) secondary antibodies were used to detect and quantify phosphorylated and total ERK protein levels.
Lysate preparation and Western blotting. Cells were treated with trypsin and pelleted. Pellets were washed twice with PBS and frozen at 80°C. Frozen pellets were sonicated (2 x 7 s) in ice-cold lysis buffer (50 mM HEPES [pH 7.5], 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 2.5 mM EGTA, 0.1% Tween 20, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 0.4 U/ml aprotinin, 1 mM NaF, 10 mM ß-glycerophosphate, 0.1 mM sodium orthovanadate). Following sedimentation of undissolved cellular material by centrifugation (Sorvall Biofuge) (4°C, 7 min, 14,000 rpm), lysates were assayed for protein concentration by use of a DC protein assay (Bio-Rad). A 50-µg volume of total protein was loaded per well, and lysates were subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting. Proteins were resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes. Western blot analysis was developed using the following primary and secondary antibodies (antibodies were from Santa Cruz unless otherwise noted): anti-p53 (Ab-7; Calbiochem) (1:2,500), anti-phospho-p53 (Ser18) (Cell Signaling) (1:1,000), anti-p19ARF (Abcam) (1:400), anti-p15INK4b (Biosource) (1:400), anti-MEK1/2 (Cell Signaling) (1:1,000), anti-phosphoMEK (Cell Signaling) (1:1,000), anti-phospho-ERK1/2 (Cell Signaling) (1:1,000), anti-Ras (Oncogene) (1:1,000), anti-PML (Upstate) (1:800), or antitubulin (Sigma) (1:1,000). Anti-mouse, anti-rabbit, anti-sheep, and anti-goat secondary antibodies conjugated to Alexa Fluor 680 (Molecular Probes) (1:3,000) and IRDye800 (Rockland) (1:3,000) were used to probe primary antibodies. Protein bands were detected and quantified on a Li-Cor Odyssey infrared imaging system.
| RESULTS |
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irradiation were assessed in early-passage KSR1/ and KSR1+/+ MEFs.
p53 was induced rapidly and transiently in both KSR1/ and KSR1+/+ MEFs (Fig. 2). To assess whether the induced p53 was transcriptionally active, Western blot analysis was performed for two transcriptional targets of p53, mdm2 and p21CIP1 (2, 18, 73). Both mdm2 and p21CIP1 were induced 2 to 4 h after exposure of KSR1/ and KSR1+/+ MEFs to
irradiation (Fig. 2), indicating that p53 can be activated by ATM following DNA damage in KSR1/ MEFs. These data demonstrate that KSR1/ MEFs express functional p53 but that p53 activity cannot be induced by activated RasV12 to trigger cellular senescence in the absence of KSR1.
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Similarly to KSR1/ MEFs expressing wild-type KSR1, RasV12 induced expression of p53, p19ARF, DMP1, p16INK4a, and p15INK4b in KSR1/ MEFs expressing KSR1.C809Y, providing further evidence that the KSR1-MEK interaction is dispensable during RasV12-induced senescence. In contrast, RasV12 induced expression of p53 and p19ARF, but not p16INK4a or p15INK4b, in KSR1/ MEFs expressing KSR1.FSFP/AAAP (Fig. 3D). Induction of p21CIP1 also required the interaction of KSR1 with ERK (Fig. 3D). This observation appears consistent with the p53-independent induction of p21CIP1 by Raf (72). RasV12-induced MEK phosphorylation is rescued by the expression of either KSR1.FSFP/AAAP or KSR1.C809Y. However, ERK activation is not rescued by KSR1.FSFP/AAAP (Fig. 3D). These data indicate that KSR1 is necessary for RasV12-induced senescence and that the effects of KSR1 require its interaction with activated ERK.
The effects of the FSFP/AAAP and C809Y mutations in KSR1 on RasV12-induced senescence led us to assess whether the KSR1-MEK or KSR1-ERK interactions were required for RasV12-mediated transformation in immortal MEFs. As observed previously (37), KSR1 expression was necessary for RasV12-induced transformation in immortalized KSR1/ MEFs (Fig. 4A). The KSR1-MEK interaction was dispensable for transformation, as KSR1.C809Y cells expressing RasV12 showed enhanced colony formation in comparison to wild-type KSR1 cells. KSR1/ MEFs expressing KSR1.FSFP/AAAP were also transformed. However, disruption of the interaction of KSR1 with activated ERK diminished the transforming potential of RasV12, as these cells showed only 30% of the colonies seen with cells expressing wild-type KSR1 (Fig. 4A).
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KSR1 enhances the cellular response to activated MEK. Whereas previous studies have shown a role for KSR1 in facilitating the activation of Raf by Ras (45) and MEK by Raf (48, 49, 56), our data suggest that KSR1 promotes signal propagation downstream of MEK. To explore the role of KSR1 in facilitating signaling downstream of MEK, we examined cell transformation (Fig. 5) and senescence (Fig. 6) induced by a constitutively active MEK construct (MEKEE) containing glutamic acid substitutions for Ser218/222 (7, 12, 41, 44) in the presence and absence of KSR1. To study transformation, immortal KSR1/ and KSR1+/+ MEFs were infected with retroviruses encoding RasV12 or MEKEE and were assessed for ERK activation and transformation by examining anchorage-independent growth and loss of contact inhibition (Fig. 5). In immortal KSR1+/+ MEFs, RasV12 or MEKEE expression increased ERK activation (Fig. 5A), caused colony formation on soft agar (Fig. 5B), and induced focus formation (Fig. 5C). As reported previously (37), RasV12 was unable to increase ERK activation or transform immortal KSR1/ MEFs. MEKEE expression in KSR1/ MEFs led to an intermediate phenotype. While there was no increase in ERK activation (Fig. 5A), the cells exhibited anchorage independence (Fig. 5B) and a loss of contact inhibition (Fig. 5C), although to a much lesser extent than seen in KSR1+/+ MEFs. When grown on a semisolid medium, KSR1/ MEFs expressing MEKEE formed approximately 25% of the colonies seen in KSR1+/+ MEFs and when contact inhibition was assessed required 5 to 6 weeks to form colonies equal in size to those observed 10 days after plating KSR1+/+ MEFs expressing MEKEE.
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Deletion of KSR1 enhances spontaneous immortalization of fibroblasts. RasV12-induced senescence and replicative senescence are both mediated, in part, by activation of the p19ARF/p53 and p16INK4a/Rb pathways (50, 59). Since KSR1/ MEFs were defective in RasV12-mediated induction of p53, p16INK4a, and p15INK4b and in RasV12-induced senescence, we assessed whether KSR1/ MEFs would exhibit a propensity to escape replicative senescence. To assess whether KSR was involved in spontaneous immortalization of fibroblasts, KSR1/ and KSR1+/+ MEFs were passaged by a 3T9 protocol (10, 67) until either cell death or spontaneous immortalization occurred. KSR1+/+ MEFs showed a rapid decline in cellular proliferation beyond passage 5 and exhibited marked amounts of cell death around passages 15 to 20, consistent with previous reports (Fig. 7A) (42). KSR1/ MEFs also exhibited a rapid decline in cellular proliferation after passage 5 and were similar to KSR1+/+ MEFs in both appearance and number until approximately passage 15. At this point, KSR1/ MEFs showed a brief proliferative burst (2 to 4 passages) followed by a second period of growth arrest which lasted 5 to 7 more passages. Between passages 23 and 26, KSR1/ MEFs began to proliferate, and 10 out of 11 (91%) KSR1/ cultures had immortalized by passage 30. In contrast, KSR1+/+ MEFs showed no signs of proliferation until passage 35 or later, after which 4 out of 11 (36%) KSR1+/+ cultures began to proliferate and eventually became immortal (Fig. 7A).
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The effect of KSR1 on the potential of MEFs to immortalize was tested further by plating KSR1+/+, KSR1+/, and KSR1/ MEFs at passage 9 at low density and allowing the cells to grow for 4 weeks. Analysis of the colonies formed from cells of each genotype (Fig. 7C) revealed that twice as many colonies arose from KSR1/ MEFs at passage 9 as from KSR1+/+ MEFs. An intermediate number of colonies arose from MEFs heterozygous for KSR1. These data suggest that KSR1 serves as a barrier against immortalization.
| DISCUSSION |
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RasV12 causes senescence by engaging the p19ARF/p53 and p16INK4a/Rb pathways, although the relative contributions of these pathways differ between mouse and human cells. p19ARF plays a more important role in senescence in mouse cells, whereas p16INK4a is more important in senescence in human cells (9, 28, 29, 50, 58, 59, 69). In murine fibroblasts, ablation of these pathways allows RasV12 to enhance cell proliferation instead of growth arrest (13, 34, 50, 52, 57, 59). KSR1 was necessary for RasV12 to increase phosphorylation of ERK and for the expression of p53, PML, p19ARF, DMP1, p16INK4a, and p15INK4b (Fig. 1D). In the absence of these antiproliferative signals, RasV12 caused proliferation instead of growth arrest in primary MEFs. RasV12 signals to the proliferative machinery via multiple effector pathways, including the PI 3' kinase/Akt, RalGEF/Ral, and Raf/MEK/ERK cascades (23, 24). In primary murine cultures, activation of the Raf/MEK/ERK cascade, but not the other effector pathways, engages the p53/ARF and INK4/Rb pathways, causing senescence instead of proliferation (41, 76). Deletion of the molecular scaffold KSR1 blocks the ability of RasV12 to signal through the Raf/MEK/ERK effector pathway to these antiproliferative pathways (Fig. 1) but leaves signaling to other Ras effectors intact (37). Thus, in primary MEFs lacking KSR1, RasV12 signaling through the Raf/MEK/ERK signaling cassette to the antiproliferative p53/ARF and INK4/Rb pathways is limited, allowing proliferation instead of growth arrest.
The interaction of KSR1 with activated ERK appears necessary for RasV12-induced senescence (Fig. 5) and for maximal RasV12-induced transformation (Fig. 6). While the activation of MEK is intact in cells expressing KSR1.FSFP/AAAP, maximal ERK activation is lost; indicating that the interaction of KSR1 with activated ERK is necessary for signal fidelity. Interestingly, MEK activation is increased in KSR1/ MEFs expressing KSR1.FSFP/AAAP, raising the possibility that a molecular brake on Raf activity is lost by disruption of KSR1 interaction with ERK. Dougherty et al. (17) recently reported feedback inhibition of Raf by ERK. Since MEK phosphorylation (and therefore Raf activity) is increased in KSR1.FSFP/AAAP cells, these data suggest that KSR1 may be required not only to facilitate but also to moderate signaling through the Raf/MEK/ERK cascade.
To assess whether KSR1 facilitates the activation of ERK by MEK, we examined the role of MEKEE (activated MEK) in senescence and transformation in KSR1/ MEFs. We observed that the introduction of MEKEE into KSR1/ MEFs yields a phenotype intermediate between those observed after introduction of RasV12 in KSR1+/+ and in KSR1/ MEFs. While MEKEE transforms KSR1/ MEFs, these cells have only 20% of the transformed foci compared to the results seen with KSR1+/+ MEFs expressing MEKEE (Fig. 5). Additionally, while MEKEE does not cause growth arrest in primary KSR1/ MEFs, there are an increased number of ß-galactosidase-positive cells (Fig. 6). These data show that activated MEK is not sufficient to compensate for the lack of KSR1, indicating that KSR1 facilitates MEK function. These data reveal a previously unappreciated role of KSR1 in the maintenance of the fidelity of signaling from MEK to ERK. Furthermore, in conjunction with the intermediate phenotype seen with disruption of the interaction between KSR1 and activated ERK (FSFP/AAAP), these data show that specific scaffold-effector interactions are necessary to maintain signaling fidelity and assure the correct cellular response to pathway activation.
Expression of KSR1.C809Y, a form of KSR1 that cannot bind MEK (47, 65), still allowed RasV12 to induce MEK and ERK activation, senescence in primary MEFs, and transformation in immortal MEFs (Fig. 3 and 4). The C809Y mutation is orthologous to a loss-of-function mutation in KSR1 detected in genetic screenings using Caenorhabditis elegans (66). While others have shown that this mutation precludes MEK activation (56), we found that MEK and ERK phosphorylation are enhanced (Fig. 3). These differences may be due, in part, to differences in experimental design or in signaling between mammalian and invertebrate systems. The KSR1-MEK interaction is necessary for many KSR1 functions, including its ability to translocate to the nucleus (5) and promote PC12 cell differentiation (47). In these studies, KSR1.C809Y exhibited a clear loss of function, which validates the biological importance of the KSR1-MEK interaction. Others have also reported a lack of biological activity for KSR1.C809Y (32, 65), but these studies used a KSR1 overexpression system where the readout was pathway inactivation via combinatorial inhibition. We also found a lack of combinatorial inhibition by use of the KSR1.C809Y construct (unpublished data). However, loss of the KSR1-MEK interaction enhances pathway activity at physiologic levels (Fig. 3 and 4). The disruption of KSR1's interaction with MEK may impair function in certain biological contexts (5, 47, 66) but increase function in others (Fig. 3 and 4) due to its ability to moderate signal output through the Raf/MEK/ERK signaling cassette. Elevating KSR1 expression promoted maximal activation of the Raf/MEK/ERK cascade, cell proliferation, and RasV12-induced transformation (37). However, ERK activation must be constrained within a narrow range by physiological levels of KSR1 to limit proliferative signals and promote adipogenesis (36, 37). Therefore, KSR1 may be required to interact with MEK and moderate its activity when a biological effect requires restrained ERK activation (e.g., during differentiation). These data indicate that specific KSR1-effector interactions are key regulators of a cell's replicative potential.
KSR1/ MEFs immortalize more readily than KSR1+/+ MEFs (Fig. 7). These data are reminiscent of the targeted disruption of p16INK4a. While disruption of p16INK4a does not immediately immortalize MEFs, knockdown of p16INK4a levels using antisense RNA constructs accelerates the establishment of immortalized cell lines (10). Furthermore, a greater proportion of p16INK4a/ cultures immortalize compared to wild-type cell results (61, 62). We observed that disruption of KSR1 prevented p16INK4a expression by RasV12. Thus, a defect in p16INK4a/Rb pathway regulation may be a central contributor to the accelerated immortalization of KSR1/ MEFs.
While we observed only a slight difference in the low-density proliferative rate between KSR1/ and KSR1+/+ MEFs at passage 5 (Fig. 7B), Lozano et al. reported a 50% reduction in the proliferative rate of early-passage KSR1/ MEFs (42). Their studies, however, were conducted at a population doubling of <6, which corresponds to our MEFs at passages 1 to 3. Although we have not conducted low-density proliferative studies at these early passages, our data are consistent with low-passage-number KSR1/ MEFs showing decreased cell proliferation compared to KSR1+/+ MEFs. When low-density proliferative studies were seeded at passage 10, 15, or 18, however, we observed increased proliferation in KSR1/ MEFs beginning around day 7 (Fig. 7B). These data would indicate that KSR1/ MEF cultures at passages 10, 15, and 18 already contain immortal cells, which are detectable when the MEFs were allowed to grow at a low density.
Premature senescence has been proposed as a tumor-suppressive mechanism, and escape from cellular senescence is one of several events which predispose cells toward oncogenic transformation (9). These data suggest that KSR1 might function to limit tumor susceptibility, since its deletion impedes cellular senescence. Furthermore, an inefficient senescence response resulting from disruption of KSR1 might facilitate tumor progression induced by oncogenic mutations that are not dependent upon Ras regulation of the Raf/MEK/ERK cascade. However, when assessing the transforming potential of RasV12 in KSR1/ MEFs, we and others have found that KSR1 is necessary for RasV12-mediated transformation in both primary (42) and immortal (37) MEFs, indicating that KSR1 is a positive modifier of tumorigenesis. This ostensible dual role for KSR1 may result from its function as a molecular scaffold for the Raf/MEK/ERK cascade. Signaling through the Raf/MEK/ERK cascade moderates cell fate decisions depending upon cellular context. Control of signal output through molecular scaffolds has been proposed as one of several nodes directing cell fate (35, 36). In both primary and immortal MEFs, KSR1 expression moderates ERK activity to affect a cell fate (Fig. 1 and references 36 and 37), with the biologic outcome dependent upon cellular context and the overall activation of downstream effectors.
These data suggest that, in some circumstances, escape from premature senescence may not be an inextricable step toward cell transformation and tumorigenesis. Senescent fibroblasts, when seeded as tumor stroma, can promote epithelial cell transformation in situ and tumorigenesis in vivo (9, 38). Senescent fibroblasts secrete both soluble factors and extracellular matrices that promote the growth of premalignant, but not normal, epithelial cells. Furthermore, this ability to promote tumorigenesis occurs irrespective of whether the senescence was induced by replicative exhaustion or oncogenic RasV12 (9, 38). Since KSR1/ MEFs are resistant to RasV12-induced senescence (Fig. 1) and less susceptible to replicative senescence (Fig. 7), it is conceivable that targeted disruption of KSR1 function could not only block the transforming capacity of cancer cells but also diminish the ability of stromal cells to promote tumorigenesis. Xing et al. (74) recently reported that treatment of EGFR-A431 or PANC-1 cells with antisense oligonucleotides against KSR1 blocked their proliferation in situ and in immunodeficient mice. Furthermore, the authors showed that treatment of mice with antisense oligonucleotides against KSR1 reduced the volume of established PANC-1 tumors. Based on these findings, Xing et al. (74) proposed phase I clinical trials to assess inactivation of KSR1 in pancreatic cancers. Our data suggest that the targeted disruption of KSR1 by use of antisense oligonucleotides could have therapeutic efficacy against RasV12-driven tumors at multiple levels. Within the tumor cells, reduction of KSR1 expression should reduce proliferative signals. In surrounding tissues, reduction of KSR1 expression could decrease the formation of senescent cells, thereby reducing the tumor-promoting properties of the surrounding stroma.
Based on these data, we propose that KSR1 expression is a barrier that cells must overcome during immortalization. While spontaneous deletion of KSR1 to escape senescence has not been reported, disruption of KSR1-regulated pathways would have the same effect. KSR1 allows RasV12 to engage the antiproliferative p19ARF/p53 and INK4/Rb pathways. Spontaneous mutations within these pathways promote immortalization (25, 34). Furthermore, genetic inactivation of either of these pathways blocks both RasV12-induced and replicative senescence (1, 10, 13, 20, 26, 30, 34, 50, 52, 57-59). The inability of RasV12 to induce senescence in KSR1/ MEFs, combined with the enhanced propensity of KSR1/ MEFs to immortalize, indicates that KSR1 is a potent modifier of replicative potential.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This research was supported by National Institutes of Health grants CA90400 and DK52809 (R.E.L.) and the American Diabetes Association (R.L.K.).
| FOOTNOTES |
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